The M&M Game: From Morsels to Modern Mathematics
Abstract
To an adult, it's obvious that the day of someone's death is not precisely determined by the day of birth, but it's a very different story for a child. When the third named author was four years old he asked his father, the fifth named author: If two people are born on the same day, do they die on the same day? While this could easily be demonstrated through murder, such a proof would greatly diminish the possibility of teaching additional lessons, and thus a different approach was taken. With the help of the fourth named author they invented what we'll call the M\&M Game: Given k people, each simultaneously flips a fair coin, with each eating an M\&M on a head and not eating on a tail. The process then continues until all \ are consumed, and two people are deemed to die at the same time if they run out of \ togetherIs one really living without ?. This led to a great concrete demonstration of randomness appropriate for little kids; it also led to a host of math problems which have been used in probability classes and math competitions. There are many ways to determine the probability of a tie, which allow us in this article to use this problem as a springboard to a lot of great mathematics, including memoryless process, combinatorics, statistical inference, graph theory, and hypergeometric functions.
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